4.5 Article

Numerical simulations of paper-based electrophoretic separations with open-source tools

Journal

ELECTROPHORESIS
Volume 42, Issue 16, Pages 1543-1551

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/elps.202000315

Keywords

Electrophoresis; Finite-volume method; High-performance computing; Numerical simulations; Paper-based microfluidics

Funding

  1. CONICET, Argentina
  2. ANPCyT, Argentina [PICT 2018-02920]
  3. UTN, Argentina [PID ASUTNFE0005525]

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The new tool for electromigrative separations in paper-based microfluidics devices is based on an open-source toolbox and inherits its features such as 3D problem handling, support for parallel computation, and a GNU GPL license. It includes support for various paper-based separations, compatibility with electrolyte database, and a novel algorithm for computing electric current. Easy installation and wide application range.
A new tool for the solution of electromigrative separations in paper-based microfluidics devices is presented. The implementation is based on a recently published complete mathematical model for describing these types of separations, and was developed on top of the open-source toolbox electroMicroTransport, based on OpenFOAM(R), inheriting all its features as native 3D problem handling, support for parallel computation, and a GNU GPL license . The presented tool includes full support for paper-based electromigrative separations (including EOF and the novel mechanical and electrical dispersion effects), compatibility with a well-recognized electrolyte database, and a novel algorithm for computing and controlling the electric current in arbitrary geometries. Additionally, the installation on any operating system is available due to its novel installation option in the form of a Docker image. A validation example with data from literature is included, and two extra application examples are provided, including a 2D free-flow IEF problem, which demonstrates the capabilities of the toolbox for dealing with computational and physicochemical modeling challenges simultaneously. This tool will enable efficient and reliable numerical prototypes of paper-based electrophoretic devices to accompany the contemporary fast growth in paper-based microfluidics.

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